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FishUnited States

Smallmouth Bass

Pound for pound the hardest-fighting freshwater game fish. Cool water, rocky habitat, crayfish prey, and acrobatic jumps.

2 viewsFauna (Animals) • Freshwater Species
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Overview

Smallmouth bass (Micropterus dolomieu) are widely considered the hardest-fighting freshwater fish in North America pound-for-pound. Hooked smallmouth typically leap repeatedly out of the water, change direction violently, and run for cover with relentless persistence — behavior that has earned them the nickname "the bronzeback" among anglers.

The species prefers cool, clear rocky waters — lakes with rock and gravel bottoms, large clean rivers, and the Great Lakes themselves. They cannot tolerate the warm, weedy, slow water that the closely-related largemouth bass thrives in. Smallmouth are distinguished from largemouth by the upper jaw not extending past the eye, by dark vertical bars on the sides (rather than the largemouth's horizontal blotch line), and by a generally more bronze-and-brown coloration.

Native range covered the Great Lakes, Mississippi River system, and Appalachian rivers. Aggressive stocking since the 1800s has expanded the range across most of North America and into many other countries. Smallmouth bass are now established in lakes and rivers from California to Maine and in significant numbers in South Africa, Russia, and Japan.

The species spawns in late spring when water reaches 60-65°F. Males excavate dish-shaped nests in gravel near rock cover, attract females, and then guard the eggs and fry for several weeks — abandoning all other activity to defend the nest. This nest-guarding behavior makes the species vulnerable to fishing pressure during the spawn; many states close or restrict bass fishing during spawning periods.

Famous smallmouth waters include Lake Erie's smallmouth bass capital reputation, the St. Lawrence River, Wisconsin's rocky northern lakes, the upper Mississippi, and a host of clear southern Appalachian rivers including the New, the Shenandoah, and the Holston. The world record smallmouth — 11 pounds 15 ounces — was caught in Dale Hollow Lake on the Kentucky-Tennessee border in 1955 and has stood for nearly 70 years.

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Fish Data31 / 39 fields

Fish Data

31 / 39 fields
Physical
Adult Size— not set
Average Length(in)15.0 in
ColorationBronze, brown, or olive-brown with vertical dark bars on the sides. Distinctive red eyes.
Distinguishing FeaturesUpper jaw extends only to the middle of the eye (NOT past it like Largemouth). Dorsal fins joined by a short connecting membrane. Vertical bars (vs. LMB horizontal stripe). Red eye.
Max Length(in)27.0 in
Max Weight(lb)12.0 lb
World Record Weight(lb)11.9 lb
Habitat
Diet— not set
Native Range— not set
Conservation Status— not set
Depth PreferenceRocky shorelines, reefs, drop-offs. 5-25 ft typical; goes deeper in summer.
HabitatCool, clear, rocky lakes and rivers. Prefers current and rocky/gravel bottoms. Less weedy than Largemouth habitat.
Introduced RangeWidely introduced across the US, southern Canada, and parts of Europe and Africa.
Native RangeNative to upper and middle Mississippi River basin, St. Lawrence-Great Lakes, and Hudson Bay basins of central North America.
Temperature PreferenceCool water — most active at 60-75°F. Cooler tolerance than Largemouth.
Water TypeFreshwater
Classification
Common Names— not set
PhylumChordata
Kingdom— not set
Species— not set
Class— not set
Common NamesSMB, Smallie, Bronzeback, Brown bass, Brownie
FamilyCentrarchidae
GenusMicropterus
OrderPerciformes
Scientific NameMicropterus dolomieu
Behavior
Active TimeDiurnal
Diet TypeCarnivore
Lifespan(yr)12 yr
Spawning SeasonLate spring (May-June) at 60-70°F. Males build gravel nests near rocky shorelines.
Typical PreyCrayfish (#1 food source), small fish, insects, larval insects, hellgrammites.
Conservation
Invasive Elsewhere Yes
IUCN StatusLeast Concern
Recreation
Best LuresTube jigs (crayfish imitation), drop-shot rigs with finesse worms, Ned rigs, jerkbaits, small crankbaits, hair jigs, soft plastic crawfish.
Best SeasonLate spring through early summer, and again in fall. Considered pound-for-pound the hardest-fighting freshwater game fish.
Best Time of DayMorning and evening; active throughout the day in cool water and on overcast days.
Eating QualityVery Good
Edible Yes
Game Fish Yes
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